Cunnersdorf (Borsdorf)

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Cunnersdorf
community Borsdorf
Coordinates: 51 ° 21 ′ 56 "  N , 12 ° 33 ′ 41"  E
Residents : 72  (Dec. 31, 2013)
Incorporation : 1921
Incorporated into: Panitzsch
Postal code : 04451
Area code : 034291

Cunnersdorf is a district of the Saxon community Borsdorf in the district of Leipzig .

geography

location

Cunnersdorf on a map by Hermann Oberreit (1836/39)

Cunnersdorf is about 2.5 kilometers northeast of Borsdorf. The Parthe runs northwest of the village . The place is connected to Panitzsch, Sehlis and Gerichshain via district or municipal roads. About 500 meters south of the location there is a connection to the federal highway 6 Leipzig - Wurzen running there .

Neighboring places

Sehlis
Panitzsch Neighboring communities Makers
Borsdorf Gerichshain

history

Cunnersdorf manor house

Cunnersdorf is the first time in 1350 as a deserted village Cunradisdorf and 1378 as Conratsdorf mentioned. The place name means something like "village of a Konrad". The personal name comes from the Old High German kuoni (= bold) and advises (= advice or help).

Cunnersdorf is originally referred to as an individual estate, later as a large estate with block-shaped estate and in 1560 and 1858 as a manor.

In 1516, Duke Georg sold the Cunnersdorf desert to Rudolf von Brünau on Brandis . In 1562 his successor - Ehrenfried vom Ende auf Brandis - built a farmyard on this corridor, which was soon equipped with manorial rights (only members of the knightly class were able to claim them. They received tax and tax privileges for the manors). In the 16th century, full jurisdiction of the neighboring village of Panitzsch was under the landlord of Cunnersdorf, who also appointed the community court, which in 1597 consisted of the local judge, who was both a representative of the landlord and the community, the master lay judge and 5 lay judges. However, the estate was very soon heavily in debt and could no longer be held by its owner. Then it was sold in 1607 to the Leipzig Council for 14,095 Meißner guilders , with which Panitzsch also passed into the possession of the Leipzig Council.

In 1840 the Cunnersdorfer Flur comprised 163 hectares. In 1840 and again in 1930 it was pastured to Panitzsch. In order to manage the land, it turned out to be necessary to submit an application for the construction of apartments to the Leipzig City Council in 1884. In 1885 the company asked for a lease-free transfer of the area to the company Lomer & Kretzschmar for the construction of a railway from the Sehlis clay pit to the Borsdorf brickworks. Until 1856, Cunnersdorf was part of the electoral or royal Saxon district office of Leipzig . From 1856 the place belonged to the Taucha court office and from 1875 to the Leipzig District Administration .

In 1921 Cunnersdorf was incorporated into Panitzsch. On January 1, 1999, Panitzsch and Cunnersdorf became parts of the municipality of Borsdorf.

Cunnersdorf experimental farm

The former manor Cunnersdorf has been subject to various changes over time. At times it was taught by the University of Leipzig , after 1945 it became the " VEG Cunnersdorf".

On May 1, 1966, the state-owned estate became the "Central Office for Application Research Cunnersdorf". The largest research facility in the GDR for the development and testing of fertilizers was located here . With around 400 employees, fertilizers were developed, tested on trial fields and up to 800 production trials carried out per year. In 1979 it was integrated into the "VEB Kombinat Agrochemie Piesteritz".

Today the test field systems are operated by the "Agricultural Application Research Cunnersdorf" of the Nitrogen Works Piesteritz GmbH. The company's products are tested and comparative studies carried out on an area of ​​around 170 hectares. The so-called field days take place at least once a year , to which customers and interested parties are invited.

Development of the population

year population
1569 16 hooves , 6 village gardens
1834 21st
1871 19th
2011 78

Web links

Commons : Cunnersdorf  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karlheinz Blaschke , Uwe Ulrich Jäschke : Kursächsischer Ämteratlas. Leipzig 2009, ISBN 978-3-937386-14-0 ; P. 60 f.
  2. The Amtshauptmannschaft Leipzig in the municipal register 1900
  3. a b Chronicle 700 Years Panitzsch 1267–1967 , accessed on October 20, 2010.
  4. ^ Area changes from January 1, 1999 to December 31, 1999. (PDF) State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony , p. 13 , accessed on February 15, 2016 .
  5. “Central Office for Application Research Cunnersdorf” at ddr-wissen.de , accessed on January 20, 2011.
  6. Information sheet of the nitrogen works Piesteritz, p. 12. (PDF; 1.4 MB), accessed on January 20, 2010.
  7. cf. Cunnersdorf in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony
  8. Small-scale municipality sheet for Borsdorf. (PDF; 0.23 MB) State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony , September 2014, accessed on February 22, 2015 .